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63 Eandolph-St., Chicago, 111. 



#LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. # 

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! UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ! 



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FAITH: 



% f cem, in C|rn larts. 



BY KEY. JOHN M. LEAVITT. 



J7///^' 



PRINTED AT THE METHODIST BOOK CONCERN, 
POE THE AUTHOR. 



R. P. THOMPSON, PRIKTKR. 

1856. 



X 






\^ 



Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1855, 

BY JOHN M. LEAVITT, 

In the Clerk's Office of the District Court for the Southern Dis- 
trict of Ohio. 



' V^VTi 



INTRODUCTION. 



The subject of this poem was suggested 
a few years since to the author during the 
preparation of a sermon. He formed his 
plan, and commenced turning his thoughts 
into verse without the sHghtest view to 
pubHcation. Interrupted, however, by the 
duties of his vocation, his progress was 
not encouraging. At last his health was 
wrecked, and he was cast amid kind friends, 
freed from domestic and ministerial cares, 
and surrounded by scenes to dehght the 
eye and inspire the soul. This poem be- 
came the companion of his solitary hours. 

It assumed its present form, and, prompted 

3 



4 INTRODUCTION. 

by the opinion of many literary Mends, he 
ventures to give it to the public. 

But I hear it said, "Has not Faith been 
the subject of sermons and essays for thou- 
sands of years? is it not fully unfolded 
in the word of God? is it not there illus- 
trated by poetry, history, biography, para- 
ble, epistle — by all the demonstrations of 
reason and the colors of fancy?" I answer, 
perhaps the subject has never been pre- 
sented in the present form. Again: God 
would have us active; he is pleased when we 
search his oracles and bring forth thoughts 
which have the color and impress of our 
own individuality. Besides, such is human 
nature, that some are attracted by the dim 
twinkle of a star, who overlook the bright 
glories of a sun. 



Jinalsni5. 



Introduction — Address to Faith — ^Invocation — Faith, rela- 
ted to the spiritual world as electricity to the natural — 
Is the basis of the filial and nuptial relations — Binds to- 
gether the race, thus leading to trust in God — Faith in 
self essential to success, illustrated in Columbus, K"ewtou, 
Washington — Faith superior in influence to Hope — Distrust 
in man a source of misery — How much more distrust in 
God — Losing faith, the angels and Adam fell — ^Whai is 
the remedy for man's ruin? — Angels can not answer — Yet 
it was shadowed to Moses — Salvation traced to the first 
promise in Eden — Gradually unfolded, till Christ appears — 
Man can not receive it without the Spirit — ^His unbelief as 
evinced by the history of the Jews, especially in the re- 
jection of Christ crucified and risen — The Holy Spirit the 
sole remedy for unbelief — ^Its descent at Pentecost. 

5 



PART I. 



tnusi Sttbjut. 



FAITH. 



What curious bosom never throbbed to roll 
Mysterious darkness from the burden' d soul ? 
Who would not tear his being's vail away, 
And burst at once into the realms of day? 
Who, who glows not with ardent wish to find, 
Where tend the restless energies of mind; 
Where point the burning passions and desires 
That hide in every breast their wasting fires? 

Exulting Faith! from past oblivion rise, 

Expand thy starry pinions for the skies; 

Let Love and Hope soar with thee from the plain, 

And with bright triumph swell thy glittering train ; 

Ascend yon summit towering in the air. 

And with thy voice wake mortals from despair; 

In accents loud as angel-trumpets blow. 

Cry, "Faith alone the path of life can show; 

9 



10 FAITH. 

Her balm can heal, her hand from ruin save, 
Her torch dispel the darkness of the grave/' 

Descending Spirit I now her power display, 
0, pour upon my theme the light of dayj 
Paint with thy hues Faith linking man to man, 
And man to God in mercy's matchless plan. 

What strong attraction with its kindly force 
Retains the rolling planets in their course? 
What all-pervading principle can cause 
The atom-armies to obey their laws? 
True as the heavenward yearnings of the soul. 
What makes the needle tremble to the pole? 
What robes in flames the radiant King of day. 
And twinkles in each star with milder ray? 
Or, tell what power invisible can bind 
Insentient matter to immortal mind ? 
Lo ! Science points, where, flashing o'er yon sky. 
With frantic joy the vivid lightnings fly: 
*'In that dark cloud," with triumph hear her tell, 
'^ Where tempests sleep, and gathering thunders 
dwell, 



FAITH. 11 

Its fire-girt throne, th' electric influence reigns, 
Which binds creation in its mystic chains." 
Thus in the spirit-world, with sov'reign sway, 
Faith rules, and calls its energies in play. 
Over the unseen empire has control. 
Explains, pervades, and regulates the whole. 

Offspring of pain ! what penetrates my ear. 
And from its mystic fountain starts the tear ? 
^Tis the sharp cry which nature prompts to show, 
A birth of anguish to this scene of woe; 
Stoop now intent — with gentler breathings trace 
The pleading features of that infant face, 
And lo, what fond solicitudes arise 
To touch the heart, and moisten in the eyes ! 
What kindly fount shall skill Divine provide 
Thro' that young form to pour Life's gushing 

tide? 
What whispering voice shall soothe the sufferer's 

cries. 
When merciless Disease his torture plies? 
And who at morn, at eve, shall watch that bed 
To wake the smile of Heav'n upon his head? 



12 TAITH. 

A mother's love with angel glance appears, 
To guard its trust, and" dissipate our fears. 

Beneath the angry frown of winter skies 
Yon garden now a dreary ruin lies; 
No smiling flowers adorn the frozen ground, 
No scented breezes waft their fragrance round. 
But wither' d stalks, and limbs without a leaf, 
Sigh to the whistling winds their hapless grief. 
Now, now sweet spring returns with balmy breath, 
Life smiles away the chilling blight of death; 
Joyful the rose exalts its blushing head, 
The glittering stream glides murmuring o'er its bed. 
Curls forth the vine to meet the genial ray, 
And clustering blossoms flush from every spray, 
While grassy walks, and trees of pleasing green 
Throw charming freshness o'er the varied scene. 
When thus, as circling seasons onward roll. 
Bursts forth the slumbering garden of the soul. 
Awake, paternal care ! awake ! designed 
To check the wildness of that budding mind; 
Let its bright blossoms to thy ray unfold. 
Guard those maturing fruits, more rich than gold, 



FAITH. 13 

And train eacli power in youth's propitious time^ 
To flower immortal in a nobler clime. 

On yonder hill my roving gaze descries 
In simple majesty a mansion rise. 
What spreads the charm of tranquil beauty round 
To make the pleasing spot seem hallow'd ground? 
'Tis not the trees whose waving branches throw 
Their glancing shadows o'er the lawns below; 
'Tis not the leveled walks whose opening flowers. 
Invite the dripping freshness of the showers; 
'Tis not the power that fascinates in art, 
Thus stealing from those walls subdues my heart. 
Behold the spell! Love's angel hovering near 
Drops from his wings his gentle influence here,, 
And in that happy home an altar builds 
Whose sacred flame each rising prospect gilds. 



But turn again; in sorrow now survey 

Where brightening joys with gladness crown' d 

each day. 
Tell, tell what spreads around this mournful gloom 
Dark as the shadows of the silent tomb? 



14 FAITH. 

There wretched bosoms, now of Faith bereft, 
To all the pangs of jealousy are left, 
While Love departs, and raging storm behind 
The hellish passions of a guilty mind. 

Turn where we may the curious eye surveys. 
Thro' the wide labyrinths of the social maze, 
From the lone hut where squalid misery pines. 
To where in pride the towering palace shines; 
From the drear isle where rude barbarians dwell. 
To lands where Science breathes her magic spell, 
Each living link throughout the endless round 
To all the rest mysteriously bound. 
While the whole wondrous chain depends alone 
Upon a central power in Grod's eternal throne. 

Thus trust in others from our infant breath 
Thro' all life's sorrows to the shades of death, 
Binds man to man, forms ties of sacred love, ' 
And points the way to Faith in heav'n above. 

Faith, too, in self, inspiring calm repose. 
Which in the breast of modest genius glows, 



FAITH. 15 

Alone can fire the daring soul for flight 
Beyond the clouds which vail the fields of light; 
Let dark Distrust enjoy her shadowy reign, 
Let fears of failure haunt the troubled brain, 
The arm will lose its force, the mind its fire, 
And every lofty scheme in night expire; 
When dangers scowl, when penury's chill frown 
Palsies the heart, and weighs the spirit down. 
When withering scorn, the jeer of silly mirth, 
Would drag the bold adventurer back to earth. 
O'er doubts triumphant, and by sneers unaw'd. 
Then let him lift his tearful eye to God, 
On Faith's exulting pinions nobly rise, 
And claim a kindred with his native skies. 

See bold Columbus spread his venturous sail 
Where mountain-billows sweep before the gale ! 
Ye lightnings, clouds, and tempests, all in vain 
Ye flash, and scowl, and rage upon the main. 
Though air, sea, sky mix in the furious strife, 
And bloody Murder whets his cruel knife, 
With soul serene, erect his lofty form. 
He towers an Atlas thro' the roaring storm. 



16 FAITH. 

While horrid dangers thus around him spread, 
Faith sheds her awful brightness round his head. 
Onward! he cries; Grod smiles upon the brave; 
No tempests now disturb the sleeping wave, 
And soon with raptured glance his eyes explore 
The misty outlines of the distant shore. 

Celestial -Faith ! thy guardian hand appears 
And points great Newton to yon wheeling spheres; 
A halo binds around his brow serene, 
As he surveys the glittering, starry scene. 
Darts his keen eye thro' the wide realms of space, 
And takes creation in his mind's embrace. 

Upon the battle-cloud, amid the storm, 
I see thy gracious glance and hovering form. 
While Britain's lion roars in proud disdain. 
And bloody footprints mark the snowy plain; 
While low-brow'd Treason hides with specious smiles 
His villain heart, and plans his secret wiles; 
While Disaffection murmurs thro' the land. 
Chills Freedom's heart, and withers Freedom^s 
hand ; 



FAITH. 17 

While patriots groan; while shrieking Hope takes 

flight 
To leave the world in an eternal night, 
From heav'n I hear thy soul-inspiring cry, 
"Fight on, ye brave! your cause shall never die!'^ 
From thy bright realms I see thee bring relief, 
A.nd bend thy footsteps toward our matchless 

chief, 
Bid him 'mid darkest perils stand unaVd, 
And trust his country to his country's God. 

Illustrious Hope ! with brighten' d glance my ey& 
Beholds thy glittering pinions on the sky; 
And lo ! I mark thy graceful image where 
Yon sorrowing genius sinks into despair. 
'Tis thine, indeed, to bid the shades depart 
Which cloud his brow, and agonize his heart ; 
'Tis thine with glowing pictures to inflame 
His quenchless ardors for the wreath of fame ; 
'Tis thine the future's curtain to unroll. 
And pour its glories on the hero's soul; 
But soon thy painted visions fade away. 

Like morning vapors in the brightening day,. 

2 



18 FAITH. 

Unless, with steadier eye, and nobler mien, 
High on her throne majestic Faith is seen. 

Mark the poor wretch whose jealous mind can 

trace 
The villain's stamp in every mortal face ! 
With envy torn, to dark distrust a prey, 
He scowls alone his suffering life away; 
Vile Unbelief, that root of every sin, 
Soon wounds his peace, and poisons all within. 
Broods in foul darkness o'er his mental eye, 
And shuts out God from air, and earth, and 

sky. 
For him no glowing wild flower of the vale 
Expands its bloom, and scents the kissing gale. 
Warm'd by his look, for him no birds agree 
To wake their morning carols on the tree, 
Nor 'mid the glittering watchers of the night 
Reveals one gentle star its guardian light; 
For him no face of beauty wears a smile 
To chase his gloom, and life's keen pangs beguile 
Nor hand, nor voice, nor glance for him impart 
The priceless fondness of a friendly heart; 



r A I T H . 19 

For him no home with fireside pleasures blest 
Fills with serenest peace his troubled breast; 
And no loved country's griefs or joys excite 
One thrill of pain, one rapture of delight; 
Instead thro' all creation's wide domains, 
One blank, unbroken desolation reigns. 
Of Faith in God and man bereft, the slave 
Thro' this dark life creeps to a darker grave; 
This all his hope, that when the worms consume 
His loathsome body in its dreary tomb, 
His wretched spirit, sinking into rest. 
Shall with eternal nothingness be blest. 

Distrust in man, the being of an hour. 
Frail as the bloom which crimsons on the flower, 
Light as yon cloud careering o'er the eye. 
While wild tornadoes drive along the sky. 
Starts in the bosom thus a thousand woes, 
And over life despairing darkness throws; 
Sad then his rebel state who can not trust 
In the great Power who spoke him from the dust, 
And 'mid the splendors of a burning throne 
Rules o'er his subject universe alone. 



20 FAITH. 

This state is man's, to this the angels fell, 
And from their native glory sunk to hell. 

Yes ! hark ! what thunders roll ^along the plains, 
Where, clothed in light, the great Jehovah reigns ! 
How leap the lightnings of his fury where 
Unbroken peace has ruled the tranquil air ! 
Behold, while flames, and clouds, and storms are 

seen 
Upon the spotless blue of heaven's serene. 
The awful Son, with terrors round his head, 
Appears to fill those blissful realms with dread I 
Why, why with anger burning in his eye. 
Rides he in wrath upon the trembling sky? 
W^hy, why with vengeful fires and tortures driven 
Kush those swift angels to the brink of heav'n? 
Fx>r broken Faith the wretched crew is hurled 
To the deep torments of an endless world. 

While loyal Faith in Adam's breast has sway, 
The smiles of Heav'n on Eden's borders play; 
But soon the Tempter with his flattering breath 
Spreads o'er life's path the sullen gloom of death; 



FAITH. 21 

Plants it with thorns, and thro' the murky air 
Wakes every grinning phantom of despair; 
While Justice rushes from her flashing throne, 
Waves her bright sword, and claims man as her 
own. 

! say, ye angels, circling near the place 
Whence beams of wisdom dart thro' distant space, 
Say, as yon ruin darkens o'er your eyes. 
And gathering shades of unknown sorrow rise. 
Say, as ye hang in voiceless wonder o'er 
Those scenes of death with glory bright before, 
Upon your minds, what life-restoring plan 
Bursts like a sun to rescue wretched man ? 
Shall nobler fruits in wasted Eden bloom? 
Shall purer light dispel that dreadful gloom? 
Shall sweeter flowers breathe fragrance thro' the 

air. 
And darkened Hope be kindled from Despair? 
Can Death prove Life, reversed the awful doom, 
And Adam spring immortal from the tomb ? 
Can Justice be appeased that man may rise 
To shine more glorious in yon starry* skies ? 



22 FAITH. 

What hidden link in Nature's chain shall bind 

To a forsaken God his rebel mind? 

What cleanse his stain, his fallen powers re- 
store, 

And to his source unite him evermore ? 

Ye stand amazed, on outstretch' d wings ye fly 

To those fair realms where pleasures never die; 

And tb yon wondering host in heav'n ye tell. 

That man who blighted earth must groan in 
hell. 

Not thus to Amram's son the future seemed 
When thro' its shade salvation's promise beam'd. ' 

Hid in his rock I see the Prophet stand, 

From ventured death screen'd by Jehovah's hand ; 

Thro' Horeb's gloom the flames had fixed his 

gaze 
Which glow'd around the bush with harmless 

blaze ; 
And near the spot his fearful footsteps trod * 
Whence thunder'd forth the dreadful voice of 

God; 



FAITH. ^ 

The angry skies attend his stern command, 
And pour their fiery terrors o'er the land, 
While rolls the subject sea its tow' ring waves 
To make for Pharaoh's host their billowy graves. 
The pillar'd cloud leads on his devious way, 
And turns to flame with the departing day; 
Potent, his rod but touch' d the rock, and lo! 
Forth from its side the gushing waters flow; 
To show him blest, before his prayers arise 
Ev'n Heav'n's own bread drops glitt'ring from 

the skies. 
On Sinai's top, where thunders rend the cloud 
And lightnings leap athwart its smoky shroud. 
He finds the Law, and in the fearful place 
Reflects the radiance of Jehovah's face; 
What more bold Prophet would thine eye sur- 
vey? 
What greater wonders can thy God display? 
Lo! thro' far ages rushing o'er his eye 
Purples the cross on which his Lord shall die. 

What angel-spirits never had designed, 

What thus was shadowed to the Prophet's mind, 



24 P A I T H . 

Time has revealed ; and now th' amazing plan 
Pours full salvation upon ransom' d man. 

Mount to its source ! see, tortured by despair, 
With what swift footsteps flee yon guilty pair! 
The evening star is trembling into view, 
And on each leaf distills the noiseless dew, 
As day departing calls the solemn breeze 
To wake sad music in the murmuring trees. 
Lo! over Eden spreads a twilight gloom. 
Like dark'ning shadows round the sinner^s 

tomb; 
The Lord has come — 'tis hence the guilty fly 
The dreaded vengeance of his piercing eye. 
But, thundering in his voice, does Justice now 
Demand the seal of death upon their brow? 
Nay ! as the sun appears, when tempests howl. 
And blackening horrors o'er the landscape scowl. 
To fringe the cloud, and o'er the sky to throw 
The brilliant colors of his peaceful bow. 
On his dread brow, where Justice has her 

throne, 
A halo bright with mildest mercv shone. 



FAITH. 25 

His voice proclaims the curse that withers earth — 
A thousand pangs* unknown before have birth; 
Death waves his sword, and wider empire claims, 
The devils triumph 'mid their fiercer flames; 
Man trembles as the fearful accents flow 
Big with the horrors of eternal woe. 
And shall o'er earth yon demon-scepter sway? 
Shall greedy Death claim millions for his prey? 
Shall Grod be mock'd, while his dominions swell 
The gloomy precincts of extended hell? 
Soft as that whisper on the Prophet's ear 
Which bow'd his head in reverential fear, 
A promise comes, and in its vast embrace 
Immortal glory for a perish'd race; 
Satan's dark empire over earth shall spread; 
But lo ! the woman's seed shall bruise the ser- 
pent's head. 

Rise, trembling Faith ! from deep despair arise ! 
Upon this promise fix thy wondering eyes; 
'Tis God who speaks, and as the seed contains 
The flowers whose beauty brightens o'er the 
plains, 



26 FAITH. 

In these, His words, the germ of heaven ap- 
pears, 

To bloom in glory thro' eternal years. 

Rise, trembling Faith! tho' clouds may vail the 
light, 

It yet shall stream unbroken on thy sight; 

He knows thy weakness, and he therefore pours 

But one faint beam from all his boundless stores. 

As evening shadows lengthen o'er the plain, 
I see yon glimmering star, first of the train; 
I see the lingering sunbeams disappear. 
To herald morning in another sphere, 
And Night, slow rising from her depth profound, 
Her mantle spread with silent hand around; 
Myriads of worlds now twinkle on my eye ! 
They glitter, regents of their native sky. 
Until flames forth the monarch of the day 
To quench their radiance in his brighter ray. 
Eound that first promise thus from age to age, 
Jehovah's truths shine from the sacred page; 
Thro' types, thro' shadows, joys divine impart. 
And pour salvation in each trusting heart; 



FAITH. 27 

Witli beams of comfort radiate the gloom, 
Kindling a way to glory from the tomb, 
Till life immortal brightens on the sight, 
When Jesus like a sun bursts thro' the starry 
night. 

Now, joyful Faith! now plume thy loftiest wing, 
In notes of heav'n redemption's anthem sing ! 
Ye morning stars, who at creation's birth 
Shouted from chaos the emerging earth; 
Ye sainted spirits, hovering o'er their way 
To lead a ransom'd race to endless day; 
Assist the strain, your noblest triumphs raise, 
Till thro' creation swells Messiah's praise. 

Alas for man ! speak to those tombs, and see 
If at thy voice their captives shall go free; 
Tell Ocean's billows when fierce tempests blow 
Back from their shores at thy behest to flow; 
Bid those firm mountains towering to the sky 
Shake at thy nod, and from their bases fly; 
Or up thro' ether let thy voice aspire 
To hurl yon sun from his bright throne of fire. 



28 FAITH. 

Will these obey? will these at thy command 
Spurn laws impressed by an Almighty Hand? 
Vain thus thy power, without the Spirit's breath, 
To light Faith's fires amid the glooms of death. 

Throughout creation mark what mercies shine, 
By wakening Faith to kindle love divine, 
And k^ow from man, know from the sacred page. 
The sway of Unbelief in every age. 

Jehovah's voice which pledged Messiah's birth, 
Jehovah's majesty upon the earth, 
Check not the boisterous passions of the soul; 
Fresh tides of violence rush without control. 
Till Faith departs, and streaming wide, unfurl' d, 
Satan waves high his banner o'er the world. 
Now heaven in wrath grows black, but pours in 

vain 
Its floods to cleanse the hell-preparing stain. 
Scarce smokes the altar in the sacred place, 
Where G-od proclaims his covenant with the race. 
And paints his mercy in the brilliant bow. 
When streams of ruin thro' the ages flow; 



FAITH. 29 

To devilish idols bow'd is every knee, 

The horrid image scowls from every tree; 

Eager the flames of bloody altars rise 

And spread their hated incense thro' the skies. 

Again Jehovah speaks, and Abram hears 

A blessing promised for eternal years, 

While o'er the race who from the patriarch 

spring 
Falls the broad shadow of th' Almighty wing; 
Both heav'n and earth conspire at Grod's com- 
mand 
To lead his Israel to their promised land; 
But soon forgot the love by night, by day, 
Which ceaseless blazed along their dreary way, 
Lo! on the mount where thunder'd Grod, be- 
hold! 
The senseless rebels serve a calf of gold. 
When Jordan parts, when to their raptured eyes 
The lovely fields of fruitful Canaan rise. 
Those pillar'd stones, those bursts of joy attest 
The glowing gratitude which fires each breast; 
But soon the temple spurned, the prophet slain, 
On hill, in dale, the glittering idol fane, 



80 FAITH. 

Show sword, nor mercy, smiles, nor wrath can 

bring 
Those stubborn hearts in homage to their King. 

0! Unbelief, how fearful is the night 
Whose dismal shadows blacken on the sight — 
Shut God from view, and o'er the Gentiles throw 
The horrid darkness of the world of woe ! 

But thro' the gloom a star, a star appears. 
To gild again the sad, despairing years! 
Hark! angels sing! thro' heav'n a glory reigns, 
Which pours its splendor o'er the midnight plains; 
In that rude place where lowly shepherds bend, 
And fraught with orient gifts the wise attend. 
An infant sleeps; an infant! nay! our God! 
'Tis He whose feet the heav'n of heav'ns have 

trod. 
Who framed yon skies, who taught yon sun to roll, 
And lights immortal fires within the soul. 

Ye sainted prophets ! ye who saw on earth 
These wondrous scenes which mark Messiah's birth, 



FAITH. 31 

Here bring your harps, here bend your raptured 

gaze, 
And Jesus sing in strains of loftiest praise. 
Behold your Savior! see yon crowd o'erawed, 
Own in his word the signature of Grod; 
The winds are his, He stills the boisterous wave, 
His voice dissolves the bondage of the grave; 
The eye, the ear, the leaping limb proclaim 
His the dread virtue of Jehovah's name; 
While round his brow effulgent glories stream 
Bright with the radiance of the Godhead's beam. 

Now, Faith, arise ! now see a Savior's face ! 
Beceive salvation thro' his offer' d grace ! 
Trust, trust his words! till death his voice obey, 
And thro' the grave shall shine immortal day. 

Alas ! in vain; what tho' the Son resign 
His Godhead's glory, and his form divine; 
What tho' his birth, life, death to every age 
Show Him the promise of the Prophet's page; 
What tho' his power o'er heav'n and earth compel 
The voice of devils, and belief from hell; 



32 r A I T H . 

His tears, his works, his streaming blood attest 
That Faith expires in man's polluted breast. 
Yon shuddering sun in horror hides his face, 
Deep, solemn darkness vails the dreadful place; 
While th' upheaving rock, the rending tomb 
Mingle their terrors with the midnight gloom; 
See, Unbelief, thy work ! yon cross survey, 
As thro' those gaping wounds life ebbs away; 
How drops yon gory brow ! how streams that 

blood 
From those pierced hands and feet, a purple 

flood; 
While covered by a cloud of wrath he cries. 
Breathes for his foes a prayer of love, and dies I 
Whose deed is this? ye sons of Adam, tell; 
Their fetters burst, have fiends forsaken hell? 
Nay! thro' the scattering gloom dim forms ap- 
pear; 
'Tis man who drives the nail, who points the 
spear. 

" Say that such scenes bid frighted Faith depart ; 
Say these rude horrors drive her from the heart ; 



FAITH. 33 

Say, while Messiah slumbers in the grave, 
On earth no spirit trusts his power to save; 
From these grim shadows let him but ascend, 
Around his throne again let seraphs bend. 
Doubt will be conquered, and a world confide 
In the rich fountains of his crimson side." 

The darkness disappears; night's vail unrolFd, 
The purple morning mounts her throne of gold. 
Lo ! from the blushing bosom of the skies, 
Wing'd with the light, a sun-crown' d angel flies ! 
The guilty earth shakes trembling at his tread. 
His light' ning glance strikes down the guard as 

dead; 
With matchless strength he rolls the stone away, 
And pours into the grave exulting day, 
"While Death, a captive in his dark domain, 
To the triumphant God resigns his reign. 

Does Faith spring forth rejoicing from, the tomb 

When bursts Messiah from its awful gloom? 

His own, his own who saw the light divine 

Year after year along his pathway shine, 

3 



34 r A I T H . 

Saw at his call departed souls obey, 
And animate again their lifeless clay, 
Behold with doubt, nay ! impiously demand 
To touch the sacred side, the wounded hand. 

Does Hope expire? exists no blest relief 
For this dire malady of unbelief? 
That Holy Spirit whose almighty breath, 
Whisper'd in Adam's soul and saved from death, 
Made willing Abr'am's hand to point the knife. 
And draw in crimson streams his Isaac's life. 
Won by his prayer on Moses unction shed. 
With awful brightness crown' d his dazzling head. 
The prophets fill'd, which breathed thro' David's 

strain. 
Distill' d on pious hearts like gentle rain. 
Shall soon from heav'n descend a copious shower, 
And Faith reviving feel the quickening power. 

Ended his work, impress' d the great command 
To bear his cross to all in every land. 
Majestic now, with outstretch' d hands of love. 
Arises Jesus to his throne above; 



FAITH. 35 

On yon briglit cloud his chosen fix their eyes 
Where fades the radiant vision in the skies, 
And shining in his image, fill'd with grace, 
Keflect the kindling glory of his face. 
But lo! their joy departs! what shadows now 
Oppress each heart, and darken o'er each brow? 
While priests and kings, with devils leagued, 

unite. 
While flames and dungeons rise before their 

sight. 
Faith shrinks disma/d, and trembles to survey 
The gathering horrors of the bloody way; 
But see them bend! to heav'n they lift their 

eyes; 
Will Jesus not attend those suppliant cries? 
Nay ! hear the rushing storm I behold the fire 
Descending swift around their heads aspire ! 
The loosen'd tongue, the bright'ning face pro- 
claim. 
The Holy Ghost within the sacred flame. 



PART II, 



in its '^tktim to % feart snJn fife. 



^nalpis* 



As spring revives nature, faith produces the graces of 
the Spirit— But by what process?— Faith exists feebly in 
the savage — He sees God in ISTature's external forms — The 
cultivated intellect beholds Him in vise laws — Creation 
reveals God not only as merciful, but just — Terror pre- 
dominates in the heathen, inspired by their views of Deity — 
Alarm fills the infidel in the hour of disease and death — 
Revelation more vividly than nature exhibits God's justice 
and indignation at sin — Instances of this from Scripture — 
This is not perceived without the Spirit's influence — An 
exhibition of the divine character and the power of faith 
in the conversion of Alphonso — His second birth unfolds 
the true secret of life, and preparative for death — These 
philosophy never afforded— "While sin exists there can be 
no true happiness — To insure peace the fountain of pollu- 
tion must be purified — ^Faith's superior power consists in 
offering pardon and cleansing the soul — ^Faith also sus- 
tains in the hour of trial— Its power shown in Noah, 

Abraham, Moses, Job, the Hebrew youth, Daniel, Paul— 

39 



40 ANALYSIS. 

The thought of Christ's humanity and sympathy a mighty 
support in son-ow — ^Faith makes afflictions blessings, and 
death a friend — Its efficacy displayed in the case of 
Fiducio — ^Faith moves God himself — This shown in the 
successful intercessions of a mother for her son and a wife 
for her husband — Faith enlarges the soul more than fancy 
or science — ^Its expansive influence evinced in the case of 
a pious shepherd — ^Faith finally sanctifies the heart, unites 
to the Godhead, and conquers death. 



FAITH. 



Hail, smiling Spring ! witli life-imparting breath 
Wake dreary Nature from her sleep of death ! 
Propitious influence from thy warmer suns 
Now thro' her secret mazes swiftly runs, 
O'er vale, o'er mountain spreads the grateful green, 
Invokes th' unfolding leaves to deck the scene. 
Paints the bright flowers, scatters gay blossoms wide 
Till cheering prospects rise on every side. 
Thus from the l)arren deserts of the soul. 
Where stormy passions rage and lusts control, 
Faith calls the Spirit's graces to appear. 
Brighter than all the glories of the year, 
And shed their heav'nly fragrance wide abroad. 
Pleasing to man, acceptable to God. 

But what the process? what the way desigu'd 
By which Faith renovates the fallen mind ? 



42 FAITH. 

To God restores, while heav'n's own joys begin, 
And life immortal springs from death within ? 

By passion dimm'd, by ignorance oppress' d, 
Faith darkly dwells within the savage breast, 
Subdues the man, looks out, the Spirit's eye, 
AYith secret awe upon the earth and sky. 
Beholds a God, where'er its gaze may turn, 
Smile in the flower and in the planet burn. 
Gleam in the lightning, in the thunders roll. 
And breathe in breezy whispers thro' the soul, 
Flush in the dawn, upon the whirlwind tread. 
Now kindling hope, and now inspiring dread. 
Life of all living. Judge of all the dead. 

When Science lights her torch, and sends its 

blaze 
To distant worlds conceal'd from ruder gaze. 
Tears from their glittering globes the vail of 

night. 
Measures their masses, calculates their flight. 
To the minute descends, shows the bright dew 
Peopled with shapes of every size and hue. 



FAITH. 43 

In our own frames reveals the wondrous art 
Which sends the life-blood gushing thro' the heart, 
Unfolds the hidden laws which govern mind, 
With passion burning, and by thought refined, 
Faith triumphs at the view — with bright' ning eyes 
Not power alone, but wisdom she descries, 
She owns a Grod — on fancy not impressed. 
To fill with joy, or fright a savage breast. 
But seen with Reason's eye, seen in the laws 
Traced on creation by the great First Cause. 

But what this God? how, how does he appear? 
Awakening most to confidence or fear? 
As when the monarch sun brings in the day 
Each feebler world retires before his ray. 
Is Justice overpower' d, while Love alone 
With blind compassion occupies the throne ? 
On Nature look — her open volume scan — 
What burning truths flash thence on trembling 

man? 
Soft as some gentle zephyr waves his wing. 
And breathes o'er earth the mildness of the 

spring. 



44 FAITH. 

Wherever we turn does Nature's voice assuage 
The guilty dread of savage or of sage? 
Say that the hues which flush in summer's bow 
O'er man their arch of covenant mercy throw; 
Say that Jehovah whispers in the breeze, 
Whose evening sighs wake music in the trees; 
Say that the flowers below, the stars above 
Unfold and shine the emblems of his love; 
That from the insect glittering in the sun 
To where vast planets thro' their circuits run, 
Thro' earth, thro' heav'n, that men, that angels 

trace 
Th' unnumber'd signatures of matchless grace. 
Is this the whole? does Justice never blaze 
Her awful terrors on our shrinking gaze? 
Ah ! turn again I see where in deadly wrath 
The desolating storm has forced its path ! 
Hark ! hark ! at midnight on yon billowy shore 
Wild death-shrieks mingle with the ocean's roar ! 
The Lightning darts, and ghastly corpses strew 
Yon shatter'd mansion, horrible to view; 
The Flames consume, the greedy Earthquake's power 
Hurls down whole shrieking cities in an hour; 



FAITH. 45 

There Pestilence and Famine, hand in hand, 
Stalk, breathing fiery vengeance o'er the land; 
While on his throne of skulls, grim, gory War, 
Thro' blood, o'er corpses whirls his thundering 
car. 

Go view the heathen ! hear his frantic cries. 
From where those horrid images arise ! 
Behold, a reptile winding o'er the ground. 
He drags his form whole provinces around ! 
There sheds his blood, there slays his child, his 

wife. 
To please his gods, and merit endless life. 
Ah ! why these rites ? why does that idol-face, 
Black, foul with rage, scowl hideous from its 

place ? 
These bear that impress on the spirit made. 
By the dire terrors Nature has displa/d; 
These but reflect the secret dread within, 
Inspired by guilty consciousness of sin. 

Nor thou, gay, shining infidel, pretend 
No piercing pangs thy restless bosom rend. 



^ FAITH. 

Wlien fortune smiles, when health from favoring 

skies 
Bounds in thy step and flashes from thy eyes, 
Then will appear beneath, around, above. 
Thy boasted tokens of unmingled love. 
But let the fiery fever wake its pains, 
Flush in thy cheek and burn along thy veins; 
Let Death exultant grin and shake his spear. 
While thy dark bosom throbs with torturing 

fear; 
Let now the dreadful shadows of the tomb 
Spread o'er thy rolling eyes their rayless gloom; 
Let thy poor, shivering spirit look abroad. 
And thro' the grave behold a wrathful Grod; 
Alas, when hope departs, thou, thou wilt own 
That Justice sits with Love upon the throne. 

If thus in life, in death. Faith's living ray 
•On infidel and heathen pours the day; 
From Nature shows how angry Justice stands 
To wave o'er man her sword with flaming hands, 
What shafts of fire from revelation dart 
To burn conviction thro' the sinner's heart! 



FAITH. 47 

Yes ! angels view, hurl'd from the fields of light 
And chain' d in dark despair and endless night; 
For Adam's sin a blighted race survey, 
Groaning from age to age their lives away; 
From earth to heav'n, and swept from pole to pole, 
O'er drowning millions see the waters roll; 
Tremble as streams of fiery ruin rain 
Their vengeance. o'er the cities of the plain; 
Hear thro' the grave the Judgment-trumpet sound 
To wake the summon' d nations from the ground; 
While robed in flames our blazing planet flies 
And scatters horror thro' dissolving skies. 
Hark ! tortured millions from their fires below. 
Shriek in the sufferings of eternal woe. 
Go to the cross — there o'er the Son behold 
Each scorching wave of dreadful anguish roll'd. 
And trembling own with me the sacred page. 
More dread than Nature speaks thro' ev'ry age. 

But cold as rays of streaming moonlight fall, 
To dimly glimmer o'er some pictured wall. 
The fearful portraitures of wrath divine. 
Which in God's record frown from many a line, 



48 FAITH. 

Address' d to Reason and to Fancy's view. 
Sketch' d in each burning shape, each vivid hue, 
Will ne'er impress until the Spirit's breath 
Shall wake the soul and end its dream of death. 
Till then, the law from Sinai peals in vain. 
Thunders its wrath and threatens endless pain; 
In vain the voice of weeping Mercy cries, 
And pleads the blood of Him who rules the skies. 
Nor grace nor judgment, love nor vengeance 

start 
From deadly slumber one unconscious heart. 

Behold Alphonso ! in his history trace 
The factj the mystery of redeeming grace ! 
Lo, kindled Faith appears at Grod's behest, 
And lights her altar in his darken' d breast. 
Soon the dim spark with brightening luster glows, 
Warms to a blaze, around its radiance throws,^ 
To heav'n aspires, and as its flames arise 
Burns a sure pledge of life beyond the skies. 

First blest by Nature, then refined by art. 

In hina shone forth each gift of head and heart; 



FAITH. 49 

Wealth, beauty, station smiled along liis way, 
And life un checker' d seemM a cloudless day. 
Oft as his thoughtful spirit look'd abroad 
He marked with joy the footsteps of a God; 
When each fine trace of Wisdom met his gaze. 
Burst from his lips involuntary praise. 
His whole religion this — t' admire the hand 
Which spread abroad the beautiful and grand, 
And praise the Artist when his ^kill was seen, 
As the contriver of a vast machine. 
Sentiment of piety took the place, 
A gentle temper seem'd the fruit of grace; 
Pleas' d with himself and flatter' d by his friendS; 
His flowery pathway to perdition tends; 
Death and eternity, those solemn themes, 
Expeird by life's gay, glittering, damning dreams. 

A change appears; behold him silent, trace 
In the pale features of a fading face 
His own unerring doom; behold him stand 
Leaning in thought his head upon his hand! 
While thro' th' echoing chambers of his soul 
These burning words in fearful accents roll — 



50 r A I T fl . 

^'Deceived, deluded, dying child of earth, 
Say, what are all thy painted visions worth ?" 

He seeks a friend — he pours into his ears 

His life, his griefs, his struggles, and his 

fears ; 
Hangs on his lips, in lowly rev'rence bends. 
While prayer that breathes with love to heav'n 

ascends. 
Now, now the vail is drawn — he sees within 
The dark polluting streams of native sin; 
Above, suspended by a breaking hair. 
The sword of Justice flashes thro' the air; 
Beneath, Death points him to the dreary tomb. 
And thunders in his ear the Judgment's doom. 
He cries, ^'What tho' no lust has stain'd my 

soul. 
What tho' these lips have touch'd no madd'ning 

bowl. 
What tho' unharm'd by each attractive vice, 
The treach'rous card, the fascinating dice. 
What tho' no horrid blasphemies appear 
Blazing from Memory's page to fill with fear, 



FAITH, 51 

An alien from my God, I see my life, 
A guilty scene of dark rebellious strife, 
My idol self, my groveling soul fast bound 
To this poor fleeting world's contracted round; 
And Heav'n despised, and pure, immortal joys 
Barter'd for earth's vain transitory toys; 
Conscience suppress' d, and quench'd the Spirit's 

ray 
That points thro' Jesus to eternal day. 
While fiends exulting in this bosom dwell, 
And kindle there anticipated hell." 

The Bible clasp'd, bow'd in the secret place, 
He pleads for mercy at a throne of grace; 
Lo, from the holy page a stream of light 
Bursts on his soul ! away, ye clouds and night ! 
Attun'd in heav'n, a voice exclaims, ^^ Believe, 
A full salvation thro' thy faith receive ! 
Look to the cross ! rejoice ! thy debt is paid, 
Each death-deserving sin on Jesus laid; 
Those groans, those wounds, the earth, the sky 

attest 
The boundless love of that expiring breast; 



52 FAITH. 

But trust his streaming blood and sweetly find 
The bliss of heav'n within thy guilty mind." 

He hears, obeys, and from his sinking soul 
Swift as a seraph's thought the shadows roll. 
To seal his faith, to smile away his sighs 
Th' eternal Spirit hastens from the skies, 
Speaks pardon thro' the blood, and bids him say, 
"My Father, God!" his sins are wash'd away, 
Joy swells his breast, praise from his lips as- 
pires. 
Love in his bosom lights her hallow'd fires, 
Hope plumes her wings, and every sister grace 
Shines thro' the radiance of his kindling face. 
While hov'ring angels, blissful at the sight. 
Their glittering pinions spread for swiftest flight, 
And heav'n exults as flies the news abroad. 
That Faith has led another soul to God. 

Here stoop, Philosophy ! here learn the art 
Which brings a balm to every bleeding heart ! 
Where spread the walks of memorable Greece, 
Thy pompous wisdom sought in vain for peace; 



P A I T H . 53 

Nor Roman genius triumpVcl to disclose 

A grateful cure for all our varied woes. 

And noW; when Science from her starry hight 

Sheds over earth unprecedented light, 

She fails, nor in her wide research can find 

One spring of true contentment for the 

mind. 
All own the malady, all feel the sting, 
A thousand curious remedies they bring; 
Yet in the spirit festers still the wound, 
And pain and death spread wretchedness around. 
But view Alphonso ! from his second birth 
What glories to his vision stream o'er earth, 
While in his soul the life of Grod appears 
To burn and brighten thro' eternal years I 

While sin exists, while conscience is defiled, 
What tho' a heav'n around the spirit smiled ! 
Fear, Discontent will pierce the guilty soul, 
And black Despair her horrid shadows roll ; 
Death, too, will frown, the grave will spread its 

gloom, 
An awful future thunder thro' the tomb; 



54 FAITH. 

A cloud of wrath obscure the face divine, 
'Till thro' the midnight Hope will cease to shine, 
And pleasure poison' d, all the life remains 
One sad precursor of eternal pains. 

Then seek you bliss? remove the cause of woe; 
Dry up the fount of wretchedness below; 
Bring- pardon to the soul, take sin away, 
And bursts at once a bright unclouded day. 
Wisdom in vain her paltry plans will try, 
Man unforgiven must forever die — 
The sting, deep-buried in his guilty heart. 
Thro' endless ages will its venom dart. 

Here, Faith, thy power assert! here, here, arise, 
And point a suffering race to fadeless skies ! 
From heav'n I see thy radiant form descend, 
I see thy footsteps to the sinner bend. 
Smiles on thy face, a pardon in thy hand, 
While clustering graces shining round thee 

stand. 
What proud Philosophy has sought in vain. 
From thee I see the weeping suppliant gain. 



FAITH. 55 

God's smile beams on his soul, and freed from 

sin, 
He feels at once the glow of heav'n within. 

Thou, too, immortal Faith, in trial's hour, 
When clouds appear, and tempests gather power, 
When from their depths indignant oceans rise. 
And dash their fury to the trembling skies. 
Like Him whose gracious hand was stretch' d to 

save 
A sinking Peter from his billowy grave; 
Like Him, before whose Majesty impressed. 
The warring elements were hush'd to rest. 
Doth save the soul, and turn the raptured sight 
To smiling fields beyond the shades of night, 
Where storms have never raged, where sunshine 

reigns. 
And gilds with joy the wide eternal plains. 

By thee sustain'd thro' many a weary year. 
While fools deride, and cynic skeptics sneer. 
There Noah by his ark's majestic form 
Defies the rising wave and bursting storm; 



56 FAITH. 

By thee sustain' d, when comes the stern com- 
mand, 
The glittering knife is grasp'd in Abr'am's hand; 
His Isaac's blood shall flow at God's behest, 
And love but brighten in his loyal breast; 
By thee sustain' d, a Moses cries to Grod — 
Lo, haughty Pharaoh bows before his rod, 
And ^eas divide, and clouds and rocks obey, 
To aid his murm'ring Israel on their way; 
By thee sustain' d, when Satan's vengeful art 
Scatters his hopes and tears his bleeding heart, 
Job hears his God within the whirlwind's roar, 
And bows his sufF'ring head, nor murmurs more; 
By thee sustain' d, the Hebrew youth disdain 
T' adore the towering image of the plain, 
And bright with triumph, as the flames aspire, 
The Son of God walks with them in the fire; 
By thee sustain' d, a Daniel kneels to pray, 
Defies his foes, nor dreads the blaze of day. 
And where yon lions glare, preserved from fear, 
Attracts a glittering angel from his sphere; 
By thee sustain' d, a bleeding Paul can sing, 
While hovering seraphs pause on wondering wing, 



FAITH. 67 

And as liis notes ascend thro' midnight's hour, 
Those tottering walls confess thy matchless power. 

As o'er life's path of sighs the pilgrim goes, 
His weeping eyes the griefs within disclose; 
When health departs, when friendship's smiles 

"betray. 
And chilling want frowns on his weary way. 
No tender glance, no sympathetic tear, 
To nerve his heart when sorrow's clouds appear — 
He feels, tho' busy millions round him tread. 
Lone as the moldering mansions of the dead. 
Then, touch' d by Grod, will Faith exalt her 

eye. 
And pierce the darkness of his troubled sky; 
Beyond the earth, beyond each horrid storm. 
There, crown' d with light, she views a radiant 

form; 
'Tis He who, circled with the Grodhead's ray. 
Once stoop' d to vail his glory in the clay; 
He knows life's sorrows, knows death's dreadful 

gloom — 
He laid within the precincts of the tomb- 



58 FAITH. 

As streams the eye, as heaves the breast, his ear 
Each cry of anguish on his throne can hear; 
His look is love, his voice resistless pleads, 
His blood before the Father intercedes. 
Till grace descends, and on the sufferer's head 
Brighter than morn a ray from heav'n is shed. 

Yes ! ^ blissful Faith, when calls thy magic power, 
For each sharp thorn unfolds a blushing flower; 
Sorrow is turn'd to joy, and night to day. 
When on the cloud thy heav'n-born lusters play; 
No dark affliction broods upon the mind 
For which thy skill a balm shall fail to find. 
While Death at thy command will yield his sting. 
And o'er the grave Hope's rainbow colors spring. 

Fiducio's cot, white on the verdant lawn, 
Blush'd thro' the trees to greet the purple dawn; 
Art, learning, virtue round him luster shed. 
While his broad fields their boundless treasures 

spread. 
Pure as the streams whose waters mingling go, 
And murmur sweetest music in their flow, 



FAITH. 69 

In thought, in feeling, wedded to his wife, 
Glides the smooth current of his peaceful life. 
Bright as the flowers whose rosy clusters pour 
Their morning incense round his happy door, 
His joyous children, lent by Heaven, arise. 
Health in their cheeks and genius in their eyes. 
Shall tearful Sorrow there exalt her form, 
And spread along his sky the gathering storm? 
Shall piercing groans those pious bosoms rend 
From which to heav'n the flames of praise as- 
cend? 
Will not a smiling God stretch out his arm, 
And with his ample shield protect from harm? 

Dark-visag'd Slander with her venom breath 
Withers Fiducio's name and seeks his death; 
An angry mob the torch of rage applies — 
His cottage soon a flaming ruin lies; 
His frenzied wife beholds with maniac gaze 
Her shrieking children perish in the blaze; 
The walks, the heav'ns, with her loud cries re- 
sound, 
And soon, a corpse, she falls upon the ground. 



60 FAITH. 

Fiducio ask'd, while his sad spirit bled, 

<^Why have these tempests raged around my 
head? 

Why has my Grod, with vengeance-burning dart, 

Pierced thro' and thro' my anguish' d, broken 
heart?" 

He asks no more; now, while the glimm'ring 
'day 

Struggles thro' dungeon-bars to find its way, 

He rises from his straw. His features shine. 

Around him plays a flood of light divine; 

His Bible search' d, behold a promise there 

Which gilds with hope the shadows of despair! 

"Smite on, my Grod," his whispering lips ex- 
claim, 

"All shall appear when earth is wrapped in 
flame; 

Thy hand th' obscuring curtain shall unroll. 

And show why sorrow thus has wrung my 
soul; 

When peals thy trumpet in the judgment- 
morn. 

My wife, my children from this bosom torn. 



P A I T H . 61 

Immortal from their bursting tombs stall rise, 
And sbare with me a home above consuming 
skies." 

Resistless Faith! tho' raging hell unite 

To bind thy pinion in its airy flight 

Beyond where wheeling worlds their circles trace, 

Beyond the march of time, the bounds of space, 

I see thee rise on thy triumphant wing, 

Pass the fair climes where tall archangels sing, 

Soar to thy God, and move th' Almighty hand 

Which bids creation wait at thy command. 

Behold yon mother's farewell to her boy! 

Who blames if now a cloud should vail her joy? 

She cries, while from her eyes the tears will 

flow 
To part with all she holds most dear below, 
^^ Son, when thy first wailing on my spirit broke. 
The feelings of a mother's heart awoke; 
And when thy little velvet lips I press' d. 
What unknown bliss dissolved my flutt'ring 

breast ! 



02 FAITH. 

Now I can see thee in thy cradle lie, 

And stretch thy dimpled hands with laughing 

eye, 
While rosy smiles o'er thy soft features chase 
Reflected from some hovering angel's face. 
To boyhood grown, o'er the smooth greensward 

now 
I see the clustering curls wave o'er thy brow, 
As there beneath our old elm's ample shade. 
Thy father's Bible on thy knee is laid. 
And now, my son, when manhood bids us part. 
And sorrow settles o'er this widow' d heart. 
Who but thy father's God can guide thy way? 
Who, who but he can save in trial's day— 
A guardian prove when earth and hell combined 
Shall strive to stain thy unsuspecting mind \" 
He goes, while filial tears his cheek suffuse, 
Flush' d with bright hopes his path in life to 

choose. 
And when Temptation spreads her glittering snare. 
And Pleasure smiles to drag him to despair. 
Drawn by her love, that mother, at the throne. 
Like Jacob wrestles with her God alone. 



FAITH. 63 

Till Faith, victorious, breathed no more thro' 

sighS; 
Kindles at last her soul and lights her eyes, 
And tells that G-race, where'er her son may 

roam, 
Shall melt his heart and guide his footsteps 

home — 
Shall lead thro^ Jesus to yon radiant shore 
Where tears are dried and partings are no more. 

And when fierce tempests burst from angry 

clouds, 
And lightnings leap amid the vessel's shrouds, 
^When thunders peal their answers to the waveS; 
And rolling ocean yawns with billowy graves, 
When hope departs, and agonizing cries 
Above the battling elements arise, . 

Inspired by Grod, the faith of yonder wife. 
With angel fervor, gains a husband's life; 
She from her home bids storms no longer blow. 
And chains the furious seas which heave below — 
She o'er the calm makes curling breezes play, 
Till smiles her loved one bounding on his way. 



64 FAITH. 

Soul-kindling Faitli ! let Science from her throne 
Unvail earth's wonders round from zone to 

zone, 
On tireless pinions bear the spirit far 
To circle space and visit every star; 
Let venturous Fancy wave her magic wand, 
Spread her bright wings, and soar from land to 

land. 
Exhaust the skies, each glittering treasure find 
To deck tV extended empire of the mind; 
All theirs is thine — but ampler thy embrace : 
These rapid worlds shall weary in their race, 
The earth shall burn, yon starry sky decay. 
And o'er creation Euin mark her way; 
But far beyond, thy piercing glance descries 
From the rude wreck a nobler scene arise. 
And wide its brightening glories spread abroad 
Beneath th' eternal sunshine of its God. 

"Where on yon mountain-side the tinkling bells 
Their morning music wake, a shepherd dwells; 
His wife and child, and flock his bosom share, 
By night his dream, by day his pleasing care. 



FAITH. 65 

From his rude eye has partial Learning seal'd 
The splendid treasures of her ample field. 
The Bible all his book, there will he trace 
With faltering tongue, but spirit-kindled face, 
Each word of light, and breathe the heart-felt 

prayer. 
To find his God in every promise there. 
Yet, thus unlearnt, his faith-expanded mind 
Beyond that narrow scene soars unconfined; 
To dawning time he mounts — he views the earth 
At God's command from nothing have its birth; 
He hears the morning stars — with Adam talks. 
And treads familiar Eden's flowery walks. 
While awful prophets sweep the solemn lyre. 
Burns in his glowing breast responsive fire; 
He presses now where once apostles trod 
To gaze with awe upon the Son of God, 
Weeps at his death — exults to see him rise 
And claim his throne, the Monarch of the skies; 
He views, as range his thoughts o'er future time, 
Millennial glory spread o'er every clime. 
And joys as rolls abroad the loud acclaim. 
Which wafts from shore to shore Messiah's name. 



00 PAITH. 

Now, now the Judgment-trump swells on his ear, 
Attendant angels rush from every sphere, 
While throned upon the cloud, his kindling eyes 
Behold the Judge majestic in the skies. 
Lo, blissful scene ! the pearly gates unfold, 
Upon his vision hlaze the streets of gold; 
Angels support his steps, swift he ascends, 
And now before th' eternal throne he bends — 
He views his Grod, and feels while ages roll 
This heav'n shall beam in bliss upon his soul. 

Offspring of God ! say Faith can tame the wave, 

And from th' abyss of moral ruin save; 

Can hush to calm the boisterous tempest's force, 

And stop the fiery comet in its course; 

Command like Joshua the sun and moon, 

Turning the evening's shadows into noon; 

Can move the arm that rules with sov' reign sway 

The wide creation in its onward way; 

What can control with mightier power and art 

The warring passions of a Christian heart? 

Can aught eradicate the weeds of sin. 

Whose pestilential breath pollutes within ? 



FAITH. 67 

Can aught avail to quench those fires of hell 
Which rage to burn the temple where they 

dwell? 
What power in this vast universe shall bind 
The waves and tempests of a human mind? 
Can Time, Affliction, Death, with matchless 

hand. 
Corruption, Hell, the World, combined, withstand ? 
Wake, holy Faith ! from slumbering ages wake, 
The chains which press a groaning Zion break I 
Cloth' d with Omnipotence, bright as the sun 
When Morning calls his burning race to run. 
Dispel each cloud, and from the suffering soul 
Each dark, despairing, earth-born shadow roll; 
Pour, pour thy radiance o'er the Book divine, 
Touch' d by thy ray let every promise shine. 
Till joyful Zion, springing from the dust. 
For full salvation in the Lamb shall trust. 

Exalting Faith ! eternally design' d 
To fix the Godhead in the trusting mind; 
The Spirit warms thee, and the blood applies. 
Till flowering round the cross I see thee rise. 



68 FAITH. 

Thro' thee, from Christ, vivific virtues stream, 
Thy clustering fruits blush in the Father's beam, 
Wide orer earth a grateful fragrance flows. 
And cheerless deserts blossom as the rose. 

The crown of all, one mighty conquest now 
Remains to wreathe Faith's bright immortal brow. 

Who has not cast from yon dark mystic shore 
Some fearful, wondering, anxious glance before ? 
Ah ! who at midnight on his restless bed 
Ne'er sought t' explore the empire of the 

dead? 
Ne'er sought to roll away that sable gloom 
Whose silent shadows curtain o'er the tomb? 
Who never trembled as some vision pass'd. 
And cried, ''Thou, too, must meet thy God at 

last ?" 
And what shall calm the universal fear 
Which shakes the heart when Death's grim 

shades appear? 
What, what avail in that last woe to save, 
And kindle glory in the dreadful grave? 



FAITH. 69 

Victorious Faith I amid the dying scene 
I see thee heav'nward point with glance serene. 
Assur'd by thee the Christian grasps his prize, 
His soul exultant while his body dies; 
And hovering now upon the verge of day, 
One look from Jesus smiles his fears away. 
Pale tho' his brow, tho' wrecked his ghastly form 
Like some lone vessel shattered in the storm, 
Mirrored by thee, flash from his beaming eyes, 
Reflected lusters kindled in the skies j 
And tho' Life's ties dissolve, and thro' the gloom 
A vast ^^ Forever^' stretches from the tomb. 
Yet, when his fluttering pulse shall mark the 

time 
That bids him soar to an immortal clime, 
Inspired by thee, upward I see him spring — 
Borne o'er the dread abyss with steady wing — 
Smile on his pallid clay, and look abroad 
Triumphant from the bosom of his Grod. 



PAET III. 



Im^Ign^. 



Invocation to Love — ^All expect a nobler future for man- 
Science and Reason can not secure it — Faith only can eman- 
cipate our race — Infidelity sneeringly interposes her doubts — 
Judging from past history her arguments seem plausible — 
The Bible presents difficulties Infidelity never conceived — 
Yet, shall Faith be discouraged? — Ko! she relies on the 
Promise and Power of God — ^And is like Elisha surrounded 
with the horses and chariots of fire — But what great truth 
shall redeem earth? — The cross as preached by Peter, Paul, 
Luther, "Wesley, Chalmers, Braiuard, the Moravians — Its 
universal adaptation — ^It reconciles Justice and Mercy — Is 
the center of the universe — But who shall proclaim it? TSTot 
angels, but men — Love the ruling principle of the minister 
of the cross — Its power exhibited in the histoiy of Edward — 
Address to Love — The anticipations of its reign not delu- 
sive; and Faith, far from visionary, does not overlook second- 
ary instrumentalities — The relation of Christianity to Sci- 
ence — To America; a short sketch of the western conti- 
nent — Columbus — The Pilgrims — America designed as an 

73 



74 ANALYSIS. 

asylum for the oppressed — They come from every land to 
form a new and nobler race — Thus the thousands were as- 
sembled on the day of Pentecost to receive salvation, and 
spread it over earth — Christians exhorted to treat foreigners 
with affection, instead of hatred, that they may be won to 
Christ, and go abroad to convert the world — Address to 
Love — ISTapoleon's concession — Love will soften men, and 
bring them to God — It shall animate Christians till it ushers 
in the millennial morn. 



FAITH. 



HaiL; holy Love ! bright daughter of the skies, 
Fairer than morn I see thy form arise; 
Wide to the breeze thy banner be unfurFd 
To wave victorious o'er a ransom' d world. 

What kindly breast the pleasing dream ne'er 

knew 
That gilds earth's clouds with Hope's inspiring 

hue ? 
What fancy ne'er the future's vail unroll' d, 
To see o'er man a nobler scene unfold; 
Nor pour'd with brightening eye, and profuse 

hand, 

Imaginary bliss o'er every land? 

The savage and the sage alike delight 

To paint the vision to their raptured sight — 

75 



76 P A I T H . 

Poetry, Philosophy exult to share 
The dream which lifts the nations from despair; 
Deep in the soul th' immortal wish has birth, 
Which spreads an undimm'd glory over earth. 

But where the power to break the captive's 

chain, 
And from the skies call Truth's illustrious reign? 
Can Science with her orient ray dispel 
The night which gathers from the shades of Hell ? 
Can Reason e'er in wisest laws express' d, 
Restrain the raging passions of the breast — 
Bind the wild nations to her splendid car, 
And wreathe the olive round the brow of war? 
Alas ! alas ! no element within. 
Shall hush the stormy turbulence of sin ; 
Faith, Faith alone, bright from her throne above 
On angel-wing, can woo triumphant Love — 
From Satan's cruel scepter bring release. 
And give to groaning earth the sway of peace. 

But thro' the gloom a horrid form appears, 
To cast her shadow o'er the future years — 



P A I T H . 77 

Halt, crooked, frowning, black as night she 

seems, 
A hideous phantom from the land of dreams,. 
Without a Grod, the grave her hopeless end. 
Her robe a shroud, the crawling worm her 

friend. 
Joyless, heav'nless, her sneering visage throws 
A dark despairing glance o'er human woes. 
^^ Judge from the past, deluded man,'^ she cries, 
'^And from Hope's flattering visions turn thine 

eyes; 
Poor dupe of priests, no promised day shall 

shed 
Millennial brightness on thy suffering head." 

Judge from the past ! alas, what lesson there 
Shall save the sinking spirit from despair? 
Judge from the past ! if this alone we view,^ 

! Infidelity, thy prophecy is true. 

The Past! stain'd o'er with blood and dark' with 
crime, 

1 see unroll' d the tragic page of Time. 



78 P A I T H . 

Scarce does Rebellion Eden's portals close, 
When Abel's blood in crimson torrents flows — 
When Murder over earth his altar rears, 
And wets his gory locks in Adam's tears. 
Scarce from their rage the angry billows cease, 
And glitters in the cloud the bow of peace, 
When Babel's towers ascend from Shinar's plain 
To scale the skies for impious man to reign. 
Scarce with their babbling tongues and humbled 

pride 
The baffled rebels scatter far and wide, 
When empires vast from blood and tears have 

birth. 
And tyrants wave their scepters over earth. 
From where yon city's splendid piles arise. 
Swift, eagle- wing' d, the rampant Lion flies. 
And bathes his shaggy pinions in their gore. 
As frighten'd nations tremble at his roar; 
The rapid Leopard, the devouring Bear, 
With horrid cries burst raging thro' the air, 
And soon ^mid Time's dark shadowy mists be- 
hold 
A nameless beast his dreadful form unfold, 



FAITH. 79 

With iron teeth, and brazen claws — his face 
Glares fiery horror o'er a wretched race, 
While budding from his brow the horri upsprings 
To hurl from his high throne the King of kings. 

Tho' from the cross the suffering Savior cries, 
Completes in blood salvation's work and dies, 
Sends rushing from his throne the floods of 

day, 
To light his martyr-servants on their way; 
Dark, dark corruptions bursting from the soul, 
Again o'er earth their streams of ruin roll. 
Alas, Hypocrisy exalts her head. 
Pride, Envy, Av'rice round their venom spread; 
The haughty Jew despising offer' d grace. 
Deepens the stain of blood upon his race, 
Till raging flames around the Temple blaze. 
Till desolation broods o'er Zion's ways, 
And curs' d by heav'n they wander wide abroad, 
Who slew with impious hand the incarnate God. 

On rocky Patmos earth and sky unite 

To pour their terrors o'er the prophet's sight. 



80 FAITH. 

Dim are the stars, and candlesticks of gold, 
And Pentecostal zeal decays and Love grows cold. 
Writhing in flames the suffering saints expire, 
From yonder cloud streams mingled blood and 

fire; 
Hark ! the : blazing mountain with tremendous 

roar, 
Dashes the wild waves tumbling to the shore ; 
Bright as a lamp yon meteor star is hurl'd 
To drop its fiery ruin on the world. 
The sun is sackcloth. Thro^ the darkenM noon 
In robes of blood looks out the ghastly moon. 
And like the fig-leaves scatter' d by the blast. 
Worlds crushing worlds from heav'n are falling 

fast. 
From open'd hell the blackening clouds arise. 
And roll their volumes upward to the skies. 
Fierce scorpion-monsters with the lion's glare, 
Belch streams of flame wide thro' the livid air. 
The moon her footstool, and her robe the sun. 
Behold with fear the star-crown' d woman run — 
To the deep shadows of the forest sped 
As bursts the horrid storm around her head ! 



TAITH. 81 

Lo; from the sea, tumultuous at liis birth, 
Springs forth the purple beast to scourge the 

earth ; 
Red, scorching vials pour'd by angel-hands 
Blaze desolating wrath o'er wasted lands, 
While heav'n and hell their fiery legions blend, 
And as creation looks for earth contend. 

Paint, Infidelity, in darkest hues 

Thy cheerless, partial, soul-contracting views ; 

In all the midnight colors of thy tomb, 

Then let the picture frown in sullen gloom. 

And fiercer flames than hate's within thy heart, 

In livid flashes o'er the blackness dart; 

Let mountains tower o'er mountains on the 

way, 
That points our race to the millennial day; 
Yain is thy art — no shades at thy command, 
No master-touches from thy withered hand, 
Can sketch such paths of blood, such skies of 

fire. 
As rise when prophet-hands sweep o'er the 

lyre. g 



82 FAITH. 

But shall Faith tremble at the dread survey, 

And turn aghast her 'wilder' d eye away — 

To passion's power, to demon-sway give o'er 

Immortal men to perish evermore — 

Behold o'er earth the deepening shadows grow, 

Dim miniature of darker hell below ? 

Nay! thro' the cloud her tall majestic form 

Towers like a sun-lit rock above the storm; 

High in her hand th' eternal Word appears, 

Bright with the promise of Sabbatic years. 

And as the scenes of future bliss arise, 

liight crowns her brow, and kindles in her eyes. 

"What tho'," she cries, "grim Superstition rears 
Her gorgeous shrines smear' d o'er with blood 

and tears. 
And horrid idols thro' the darkness frown. 
Where pagan knees to demon-gods bow down; 
What tho' the Beast and Prophet both unite 
To wage the war of hell, and spread her night; 
What tho' vice, crime, each hideous form of 

sin. 
Triumphs without, and riots foul within, 



FAITH. 83 

And Satan with his crew of earth possess' d, 
Make a vile temple of the human breast! 
Beyond the skies majestic scenes unfold, 
Bright; mighty angels wave their wings of gold, 
Rank on shining rank from heav'n descend, 
And with the wrestling saints in battle blend. 
There, radiant sight, my dazzled gaze descries 
Th' eternal throne in awful glory rise; 
There, with Creation in his broad survey, 
The Triune God prepares salvation's way. 
His Word, his Power, his Love, all, all, com- 
bined 
T' extend the sway of Jesus o'er the mind." 

Thus, when the morn on Canaan's hills ap- 
pears. 
And flashes terror from the Syrian spears. 
While clam'rous foes, on fire with deadly hate, 
Thunder their rage around the city's gate. 
The peaceful Prophet, with uplifted gaze. 
Beholds the towering mountains in a blaze. 
And steeds of fire, and flaming chariots driven 
By angel-warriors from the gates of heav'n. 



84 



FAITH 



But say that earth shall be Messiah's throne, 

And every land his gracious scepter own, 

What truth immortal, wing'd by Grod, shall 

shed 
Its light along the pathway of the dead? 
If eloquence, philosophy, in vain 
Shall strive to spread the bright expected reign, 
What broader, nobler plan shall wisdom trace 
To pour salvation o'er a groaning race? 

Baptized with fire, and armed with power divine, 

I see round Peter's brow a radiance shine; 

He thunders not the law — not hell, not death 

Flame forth their terrors in his burning breath ; 

Se preaches Jesus — ^fixes on the Jew 

The blood of that Messiah whom he slew. 

And soon with melting tears, with broken sighs, 

Ascend to heav'n his penitential cries — 

He trusts that blood — exults in Mercy's plan. 

And shows Christ crucified the hope of man. 

Thus, when, superior to meridian day. 
Celestial splendor lights Paul's bloody way. 



FAITH. 85 

No fires of judgment blaze eternal wrath, 

No Sinai's lightnings gleam along his path; 

Astounded, dazzled, on the ground, he hears 

The gentle yoic€ of Jesus pierce his ears. 

Now justified by Faith he flies abroad, 

A flaming messenger prepared by Grod; 

Christ is his theme, his power, his life, his all, 

Before his glance lo Satan's minions fall. 

While saved by Faith, shall deathless thousands rise 

To shed with him a glory o'er the skies. 

On this great truth then let proud Reason frown, 
Let cold, vain Infidelity look down ; 
Behold the proof! the cross, the cross can save, 
Can shed a smile that gilds the gloomy grave. 
Can burst its power, and bear the man away 
Pure, bright, immortal thro' an endless day. 

Heroic Luther! numbers fail to tell 

The midnight groans breathed thro' thy wretched 

cell ', 
The charms of learning, and the smile of friends. 
Each brilliant dream Hope with thy future blends, 



86 FAITH. 

Are sacrificed in vain — fasts, vigils, sighs, 
The burning prayers that from thy bosom rise, 
But deeper shadows o'er thy pathway throw, 
But wake to fiercer flames the hell below. 
When all is lost — when Sinai's roar within 
Has stirred to giant power victorious sin, 
To yonder Book — whose deathless truths in vain 
Within a convent's walls would tyrants chain- 
Now wing'd by heav'n, ardent, we see thee fly, 
And from Truth's fountain drink with kindling eye. 
Soon free in Christ, soon arm'd by Grod's own 

hand, 
The Papal bulwarks shake at thy command; 
The Church may curse, the angry Schoolmen frown, 
While tyrant-hands are raised to hurl thee down. 
The cross sustains — ^fled, fled thy legal night. 
Thy soul sheds over earth salvation's light. 

When withering Unbelief, with fatal breath. 
Had chill'd the soul, and blown her blasts of 

death, 
And kings and nobles steeped in every vice 
Barter'd their souls for pleasure's brilliant price, 



FAITH. 87 

When scoff'd Philosopliy and polisli'd Sin, 
To hide the rank deformity within, 
While from the palace and the court wide pour 
Their streams of ruin to each cottage door, 
When priests turn infidels, and pulpits cease 
To sound salvation thro' the blood of Peace, 
When forms and dry moralities abound, 
And Christless heresies spread poison round. 
And Keason, impotent to stem the tide, 
But sadly mourns the wreck on every side. 
We see thee, Wesley, grope a legal slave 
Till in the cross appears a power to save. 
Thy labors, rigors, charities are vain. 
Still lingers in thy breast the secret pain. 
Friends, prospects, country left at once behind 
Afford no lasting comfort to thy mindj 
Sincere Devotion soothes thee not to rest, 
Breathes not the long-sought peace into thy 

breast; 
Yet Conscience stings, and when the billows roll. 
Death, ghastly Death, strikes terror thro^ thy soul. 
Kenouncing all, from self thy spirit turns. 
Now led by God the way to Jesus learns; 



88 FAITH. 

Peace, joy arise — thy being soars above 
To dwell in cloudless realms of perfect love. 
No Churclimaii's rage, no infidel's cold sneer. 
No jQiadden'd mobs can shake tbee now with 

fear; 
Toils, perils, deaths along thy upward way, 
But wing thy footsteps toward eternal day; 
Each clime, each age, a grateful race shall own 
The full salvation to thy Faith made known. 

Where Scotia's shore towers o'er the northern 

main. 
Crown' d with the splendors of fair Learning's 

reign ; 
Where Reason, Fancy, Piety all blend, 
And over earth refining grace extend. 
Thy genius, Chalmers, did the power attest 
The hated cross sways o'er the human breast. 
In vain thy vast imagination flew 
To snatch from gorgeous skies each brilliant 

hue, 
That Virtue, smiling in her robes of light, 
Might pour attracting glories on the sight. 



FAITH. 89 

In vain o'er vice thy eloquence would throw 
Shades dark as those which frown in worlds 

beloW; 
No soul is pierced, no troubled conscience wakes, 
No trembling wretch from Satan's fetters breaks, 
No peace, no joy, no holy lives are given 
To stamp upon thy words the seal of Heav'n. 
But when the cross thy lofty spirit bends. 
What unknown power thy burning words attends ! 
'Tis then thy glad, exultant eye can see 
Rejoicing men from Sin's dominion free — 
Pure in their lives, the sway of grace they own, 
And dying shine with thee before the throne. 

Where burst the yelling panther from his lair, 
And thro' deep forests roll'd the Delaware, 
As the soft moonbeams silver o'er his face. 
And on his features blend with radiant grace, 
Amid the shadowy trees, in wrestling prayer, 
Hear Brainard's sighs breathe thro' the midnight 

air! 
Now with subduing love and heav'nly art 
His inspired words pierce the rude Indian's heart, 



90 FAITH. 

And tears and sobs, as sliakes liis lofty form., 
Show in his troubled breast the fearful storm. 
Lo ! from the cross breaks forth Salvation's ray, 
And each dark shadow brightens into day; 
His wives, his idols, and his sins resigned. 
His willing heart to holiness inclined, 
His spotless life, his soul on fire with love, 
Show him the ransom'd heir of joys above. 

On dreary Greenland, where rude tempests roar, 
And towering icebergs line the wint'ry shore. 
Where, dark and bleak as arctic nights and 

snows, 
The frozen soul to half its stature grows, 
Where, weak as polar suns, had science failed 
To melt the icy rigors which prevailed. 
The cross pours light upon those pagan eyes, 
Warm, vital as the orb of tropic skies. 
Calls from the soul the flowers of grace to bloom, 
And fragrance shed in worlds beyond the tomb. 

Behold the cross in climes where rayless night 
Vails all save horrid phantoms from the sight, 



FAITH. 91 

And o'er where Learning with her polisVd hand 

Has pour'd refining virtues on the land, 

O'er hearts of kings with royal splendors crown' d, 

O'er the rude peasants toiling in the ground, 

O'er white and black, o'er every form and shade, 

Its vast unrival'd triumphs has display' d, 

And yields the pledge its conquest ne'er shall 

cease 
Till smiles on ransom'd earth a heav'n of peace. 

The cross — ^here heav'n and earth in mercy blend, 
His thunders hush'd, God speaks the sinner's 

friend; 
Here Love and Justice smiling face to face 
Sustain creation's throne in their embrace, 
While angels joy to see th' amazing plan 
That honors Grod, and rescues guilty man. 
The cross — let states in bright succession spread, 
Or sink their fading splendors with the dead, 
Let peopled planets gild the night of space 
Or fly to fragments in their rapid race. 
Let systems change, a universe decay. 
And new creations blaze into their day. 



92 FAITH. 

Thro' heav'ii; thro' hell, eternity, and time, 
Their mighty center towers the .cross sublime. 

But glory-crown' d, who, who shall bear abroad 
The cross which lifts the nations to their Grod? 
Shall angels, eloquent, with lips of flame. 
In Heav'n's own accents speak Messiah's name? 
Bright, blissful hosts, glad from yon glittering 

spheres 
Your willing feet would seek this land of tears; 
Loos' d from your waving locks with eager hands 
Their starry crowns, I see your rushing bands, 
^' Harps, robeS; and songs, farewell, farewell,'^ ye 

say, 
"Adieu ye mansions of eternal day. 
We leave th' illustrious presence of our King, 
From these broad gates fly on exultant wing. 
All heav'n we give, in yon dark world of pain 
To spread the victories of Messiah's reign." 
Alas ! in vain with flaming zeal ye burn. 
Back to your realms on drooping pinions turn; 
For you his blood divine was never spill' d, 
No penitential pangs your breasts have thrill' d. 



FAITH. 93 

Ye never groan'd beneath. Affliction's smarts, 
At you Temptation shoots no fiery darts, 
The joys of Faith, the brotherhood of Grod, 
The paths of death by angel-feet untrod, 
The grave's deep gloom, the triumph o'er its power 
When dawns on earth the resurrection hour, 
Hell, Judgment, Heav'n form no tie that binds 
You in soft sympathy with human minds. 
As rise the ransom' d millions to his view, 
Jesus the broad command gives not to you; 
Baptized by heav'n, yon treacherous, trembling 

band. 
Shall spread his triumphs wide thro' ev'ry land. 
Circle like flames the earth from zone to zone. 
And rising thro' its gloom behold his throne. 

Yes ! weak himself, environed by his foes. 

Yet arm'd by Heav'n, the Christian warrior goes; 

Truth girds his loins, and Peace his feet has 

shod, 
To urge his steps in battle for his God; 
High on his brow resplendent lusters play, 
Hope's towering helmet glitters o'er his way, 



94 FAITH. 

Faith's shield protects from every fiery dart 

By Satan hurl'd^ to pierce his dauntless heart; 

His sword the Word, while rushing armies run, 

Reflects its beamy terrors in the sun, 

And writhing at his feet Hell's legions lie, 

When wave its fiery circles in the sky. 

Tho' clothed by God, tho' breathing matchless 

might, 
No fields of carnage blush before his sight. 
No banners rolFd in blood, no shrieks of pain. 
Spread their dire horrors o'er the trembling plain. 
Love rules his heart. Love beams in every glance. 
Love wings his rapid footsteps to advance. 
And Love shall nerve his arm till wide unfurl' d 
Her standard streams in triumph o'er the world. 

Warm'd by her flame, the pious Edward flies. 
On his meek brow the impress of the skies. 
Soft as the morn its earliest blush reveals, 
The great salvation o'er his spirit steals. 
Wash'd in the blood, I see him now rejoice. 
While Heav'n lights up his eye and melts his 
voice. 



FAITH. 95 

" What peace/' he crieS; ^^ within my spirit 

springs ! 
O'er life, o'er death, the cross its halo flings; 
Jesus my heart, my mind, my being fills, 
And every trembling nerve with rapture thrills; 
But to myself shall I this bliss confine. 
Nor bid o'er earth the free salvation shine ? 
Shall hopeless millions drop into the grave, 
Nor ever hear that Jesus died to save? 
Nay! at the cross which bought my soul I fall; 
To spread his name I consecrate my all: 
Home, country, friends, I bid ye all adieu. 
0, what a vision rushes to my view! 
Millions, immortal by the Spirit's breath. 
Bright, like their Lord, surmount the glooms of 

death ; 
I see them rise. Triumphant angels wait; 
The shining host streams thro' yon golden gate; 
Thrones, harps, and crowns, o'er heav'n their 

luster throw, 
Because a worm like me has toil'd below." 
He goes! the glance, the sob, the tear, attest 
Fond nature's struggles in each parent's breast. 



96 FAITH. 

Spread the white sail^ his moistening eyes ex- 
plore 
O'er the blue wave his country's fading shore, 
And soon the Bible clasping in his hands, 
Beneath yon broad banana's shade he stands. 
What tho' a shining crowd no longer hear, 
To ^our their perfumed praises in his ear ! 
What tho' wealth, learning, fame, all left behind, 
Shall charm no more his consecrated mind ! 
Far nobler joys are his — the heathen shares 
By day, by night, his toils, his dreams, his 

prayers ; 
Peace rules his heart, and purest raptures swell 
When ransom'd spirits burst the chains of hell, 
Receive the cross, and as their praise ascends. 
Evince within the Life that never ends. 

Say, Judson, say, when tortures Ava's chain. 
And torrid suns pour fire upon thy brain, 
When fetter' d with the outcasts of the earth, 
The suffering subject of a tyrant's mirth. 
Comes, sadly comes, upon the scorching gale, 
With prison-curses mixed, thy infant's wail, 



P A I T H . 97 

While prostrate she, thy angel, nay, thy wife, 

From pagan bounty holds her guardian life. 

By demons mock'd, with all thy griefs oppress'd, 

Ah! sweeps no storm of anger o'er thy breast? 

Nay, but like Stephen, bleeding from his blows. 

Love breathes forgiveness toward thy cruel foes. 

When, burst thy fetters, softest breezes now 

Expand thy soul, and play upon thy brow. 

Waft with thy loved ones o'er the placid stream. 

From scenes that frown like phantoms of a 

dream. 

Shall these not bear thee to thy native shore? 

Say, can thy bleeding heart love Burmah more ? 

While weeping there beneath yon willow shade, 

Where all that made earth bright for thee is laid. 

Still shall thy form bow down for Burmah tJiere^ 

Still from thy lips ascend the glowing prayer? 

Where frowns Helena o'er the sullen wave. 

Where sleeps thy other guardian in her grave, 

Still shall thy sobbing voice the cry repeat. 

Still shall thy heart with warm pulsations beat, 

Still shall thy longing eye look o'er the sea, 

Still burns the wish that Burmah shall be free? 

7 



98 FAITH. 

Let God afflict, let devils wing their way, 
And mountains pile in Burmah's path to-day, 
Thy Spirit-kindled love shall never die, 
In Burmah's tongue ih.' eternal Word shall fly, 
And 'mid his jungles, charm' d, the Karen's ear 
The Gospel-message from thy lips shall hear. 
Then, Judson, then, on some celestial hight. 
Where play the splendors of immortal light. 
From distant shores, from ocean's yielding tide, 
Thy gather'd fam'ly glowing at thy side. 
Far, far thro' ether shall thy eyes explore, 
Boodh's temples crumbling upon Burmah's shore. 
On Ava's turrets see the cross arise, 
While Burmah's anthems peal along the skies. 

Celestial Love ! thy bright difi'usive ray 

Shall, like a sun, shed universal day. 

Ofi'spring of Faith ! pour'd from the Christian's 

soul 
Swift thy broad radiance spreads from pole to 

pole, 
High to the throne the wide effulgence streams, 
And heav'n and earth commingle in thy beams. 



FAITH. 99 

Say not 'tis Fancy's dream — that Hope beguiles, 
And gilds earth's ruin with delusive smiles. 
Tho' born of God, Faith on his word relies, 
And darkening doubts, spawn of the pit, defies; 
Yet, while exulting in celestial birth. 
She scorns each mean support but drawn from 

earth ; 
The Past, the Present, spread before her gaze, 
Inspire with zeal, and animate to praise. 

Handmaid of Faith ! illustrious Science rise. 

And hail her Gospel angel as he flies. 

When from her throne Religion once was hurl'd. 

And Satan's shadow rested on the world. 

When in the cloister glimmer' d but a ray. 

The sad memorial of a brighter day, 

And kings, and priests, with tyrant-hate combined 

To quench the glory of immortal mind, 

Rous' d from thy slumbers, rais'd thy matchless 

hand, ^ ^ 

Night's horrid phantoms scatter from the land — 
Warm'd by thy beams, preparatives of grace, 
Starts on a new career a wakening race. 



100 FAITH. 

Nbwy Science, aid ! for, nursed and cheered by 

thee, 
The babe learns -wisdom on its mother's knee; 
The cabin' d school, the academic hall, 
Make warriors ready for the Gospel call. 
Scatter' d by thee the page of life shall fly 
Like the Tring'd seed across an autumn sky. 
Joined by thy hand, tho' hostile billows roar, 
Thy potent ties link shore to distant shore. 
Ruled by thy power, earth, sea, and sky obey. 
To urge Salvation's heralds on their way. 
Then Xature search — let thy commanding skill 
Make each stern element attend thy will ; 
Fly on the winds, compel the sun to write 
And paint the magic image with his light; 
Plow the wild wave, and send the thundering 

car 
O'er the broad land swift as some meteor-star; 
Snatch from its native cloud celestial fire 
Tq speed thy servant on the noiseless wire. 
Faith hails thee. Science I clasps thee to her 

heart, 
Wide over earth thy beams she bids thee dart, 



FAITH. 101 

Exalt the cross, and toil till every eye 
Beholds its glories streaming o'er the sky. 

To thee, America ! Faith turns to thee, 
Hope of the world and refuge of the free — 
As o'er the western wave her vision turns 
Her glowing breast with joy triumphant burns. 

The sinking floods, impress' d by God's command. 
Thy mighty limits fix, unrival'd land ! 
From pole to pole thy vast dimensions sweep. 
On either side far rolls a boundless deep, 
And winter climes, and torrid suns thine own, 
From thee are pour'd the products of each 

zone. 
For silent centuries great Nature's hand 
Mingles for thee the beautiful and grand. 
While no vile passions and no human gore 
Pollutes thy sacred soil from shore to shore. 
She heaves thy soaring mountains to the skies, 
Matchless, immense, she bids thy rivers rise; 
Majestic lakes at her behest spread wide, 
On whose broad bosoms future fleets shall ride; 



102 FAITH. 

Descending swift within the willing earth 
To glittering wealth her secret skill gives birth, 
Starts forth thy forests and prepares thy soil 
To call from every land the tiller's toil. 

Led on by Him whose counsels marFd the 

time 
To lift the curtain from our western clime, 
His shatter' d fleet the brave Columbus steers 
Where o'er the surge the promised world appears. 

When shook the Papacy^ when trembled hell 
As spread the day which burst from Luther's 

cell, 
Expell'd by tyrants, the lone pilgrim sail, 
Wet with the wave, and riven in the gale. 
Bears exiled Faith to wild New England's shore, 
Where Indians lurk and winf ry tempests roar. 

Behold, an empire built by prayer and tears, 
Far thro' the gloom its stately structure rears. 
And savage hate and British force in vain 
Unite to strew its fragments o'er the plain! 



FAITH. 103 

From the firm rock its airy summits rise, 

And Heav'n's own sunshine gilds again the 

skies. 
Anointed priests in crimson garments dressed, 
With martyr-courage glowing in each breast, 
Kneel at its shrine, and round its altars stand 
Whose quenchless flames shall brighten ev'ry 

land. 
High, streaming o'er its dome, the eye be- 
holds 
An eagle-banner wave its starry folds. 
O'er each wide ocean joyful anthems roll, ' 
Borne on exulting breezes to each pole. 
Till wak'd to hope the suffering nations pour 
Their living streams to Freedom's blissful shore. 

Say, who shall stay the tide? say, who shall 

dare 
Drive back the rushing millions to despair? 
With cheerful accents, confident in Grod, 
I hear Faith's angel-welcome peal abroad. 
"Come on," she cries, "Ye weary races flee, 
Burst from the tyrant's chain and here be free; 



104 FAITH. 

Here wing'd by me your kindred's prayers have 

flown, 
Till Heav'n has smiled, and called the land her 

own : 
Their arms, their counsels mingled in tte plan, 
When Freedom flash' d her glory over man. 
By wisdom temper' d, and each lust controll'd, 
Come till our fields, come share our priceless 

gold; 
Learn Freedom's lessons where her fountains pour 
Rivers of life round every happy door, 
And taught by me, each longing, deathless mind 
The nobler Freedom of the cross shall find." 

Rous'd by her call the startled nations run. 
From climes they rush scorch' d by a torrid sun. 
From icy shores where polar tempests sweep. 
From flowery isles where tranquil shadows sleep, 
From where huge altars blush with human gore. 
From lands where Science reigns, and Art may 

soar. 
From hut and palace, of each tongue and hue, 
Pagan, Infidel, Romanist, and Jew, 



FAITH. 105 

While from the mass Faith's bright^ prophetic eyes 
Behold a race of noblest mold arise. 

Thus, thus at Pentecost the thousands came 
From distant lands to catch the Spirit's flame; 
In glowing breasts receive th' eternal plan, 
And publish Jesus to despairing man. 

Children of Faith ! now tear away the vail, 
Let not the heart grow faint, the brow turn pale ! 
Read Heav'n's decree, nor spread o'er future 

time 
Scenes red with gore and black with hideous 

crime. 
Your father's prayers are pleading still on high, 
Tour own may pierce the portals of the sky ; 
Trust, then, your Grod, whose sovereign grace can 

quell 
Passions more fierce than burn in deepest hell; 
And when the stranger shelters on your shore, 
Let not the saber's flash or cannon's roar, 
A jealous word, a glance of vengeance start 
The slumb'ring malice of a desp'rate heart. 



106 FAITH. 

Nay! as Ms sail shall whiten o'er the sea, 
And eye grow bright to think he shall be free, 
With Friendship's smile, with Love's own tones 

address' d. 
Open your arms and clasp him to your breast; 
On his sad cheek let Sorrow's tear be "dried, 
The Bible give him and to Jesus guide ; 
Thus Love shall gain his heart, thus Love shall 

glow. 
Till Earth's great Sabbath dawns o'er all below. 

Parent of joy ! of Grace the happy child, 

Ev'n Hep,v'n, Love, without thy beam ne'er 

smiled ; 
Angels to angels link'd and to the throne. 
Thro' endless years thy blissful sway shall own. 

The great Napoleon on his weary rock, 

Hush'd now the victor's shout and battle's shock, 

A captive now to narrow bounds confined. 

No schemes of conquest glowing in his mind. 

As Meditation o'er life's evening threw 

A Wisdom fierce Ambition never knew, 



FAITH. 107 

His error saw — saw Force with, tyrant sway- 
Might briefly make reluctant man obey; 
But only Love's omnipotent control 
Could found a lasting empire in the soul. 

Triumphant Love ! not on the whirlwind's wing 
High o'er admiring earth I see thee spring, 
Beat down the mountains with resistless force, 
While angry thunders play along thy course. 
Th' earthquake's shock, th' impatient lightnings 

hurl'd 
To dart their fiery terrors o'er a world, 
The war of elements can never start 
One kindred feeling in thy gentle heart. 
Blood and battle, strife and the fierce debate 
May fan to flames the fires of burning hate — 
These tear thy breast, these drive thee from the 

earth, 
To seek the purer climes that gave thee birth. 
The hand's soft pressure and the kind relief 
That brings contentment to the home of grief, 
The melting glance, the sympathetic voice 
That can in Jesus bid the heart rejoice. 



108 FAITH. 

These are thy arms — ^with these thy empire 

spreads; 
And over earth its soften' d splendor sheds. 

Immortal Love ! thro' every age and clime, 
Till quench' d in night expires the lamp of time, 
Impeird by thee to my exultant eyes 
Rank after glowing rank thy children rise. 
The martyr's flame, the tyrant's bloody chain, 
Unite to check their onward steps in vain ; 
They climb the mountain, shelter in the vale. 
O'er boundless oceans fly with fearless sail. 
Fierce tropic heats and polar storms and snows. 
Disease and Death, powerless, their march oppose ; 
On like the sun, thy chariot on they roll, 
Till bursts millennial glory o'er the soul. 



§Gtt%. 



PART I. 

Page 10. — Electricity is supposed to be identical mth 
light, magnetism, and galvanism. Perhaps it is the cause 
of chemical affinity and gravitation, as "well as the connect- 
ing principle of matter and mind; nay! some believe it the 
great pervading and.controlling element of the universe. 

Page 18 — This description of the effect of infidelity was 
suggested by a person known to the author from early boy- 
hood. 

Page 20. — Fletcher is the only author I have read, who 
advances the idea that the angels, as well as Adam, fell 
from want of Faith. 

Page 21. — Many wise and holy men think our race has 
gained more in Christ than it has lost in Adam. 

Page 23. — I trust I will not be charged with unwarrant- 
able liberty in intimating, that Moses in the rock caught a 
glimpse of Christ's incarnation and sacrificial death. 

Page 28, &c. — I may be accused of want of originality in 
illustracing unbelief, and its remedy, by reference to the 



110 NOTES. 

history of the Jews, the rejection of Christ, and the baptism 
of Pentecost. But why refuse a stronger for a weaker proof ? 
Why be ashamed to draw streams of truth from the divine 
fountains, to verify and fertilize a theme? 



PART II. 

Page 41. — That Faith is the parent of the graces, is 
familiar to every reader of the Gospels. 

Page 42. — Does not the belief of the savage in an all- 
ruling Spirit, and a hereafter, influence his life more than we 
imagine ? 

Page 43. — There is a vast difference, in the faith of the 
Barbarian and the Philosopher. The one sees God in ex- 
ternal forms, the other in wise laws. In the one. Fancy pre- 
dominates, in the other. Reason. 

Page 44 — That Justice, as well as Love, is manifested 
both by Nature and Revelation, is so palpable, that a denial 
of the fact is no small proof of the mental and moral dis- 
order of our race. 

Page 45. — Richard Watson says, that the very counte- 
nance of the heathen expresses his views of the Deity. 

Page 52. — The distinguishing excellence of the Gospel is, 
that it provides for the pardon of sin, and the sanctification 
of the heart, attested by the Holy Ghost, issuing in Love as 
the principle of obedience, and fruitfulness in all good 



NOTES. Ill 

works, thus constituting a preparation for tlie lioliness of an 
eternal heaven. Where else is such a remedy? 

Page 58. — ^Under tlie reign of grace, Affliction is, to every 
believer, a Mercy, Death a friend, Eternity a joy. 

Page 63. — That the prayer of Faith moves the heart and 
arm of God, is every-where taught in the Bible. The mys- 
tery, who can explain? The successful intercessions of the 
mother and wife, will excite incredulity in no Christian 
breast. 

Page 67. — Do not the divine oracles expressly say, "the 
blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin?" 

Page 67. — Consider the Christian's exaltation! He is not 
only freed from guilt and pollution, but made a Temple of 
Godhead. 

Page 69. — Innumerable witnesses might be summoned 
from the pious families of the land, to testify that they have 
witnessed triumphs over death similar to that here de- 
scribed. 



PART M I. 

Page 75. — The desire and expectation of a happier and 
nobler condition for man seems universal. Where the pro- 
vision to satisfy it but in the promises of God's Word? De- 
prived of this, there must be in the soul an eternal hunger 
and an eternal thirst. 



112 NOTES. 

Page 77. — The creed of modern Infidelity is nearly this — 
man came from a tadpole, and goes to a Tvorm. 

Page 78. — The imagery in these stanzas is from the Bible. 
The murder of Abel, the building of Babel, the sway of 
Nimrod, are instances of wickedness known to every child. 
The Lion, eagle-winged, represents the Babylonish empire, 
the Bear the Persian, the nameless beast the Koman, the 
Horn the Papacy, The Pride, Envy, Avarice, alluded to, 
refer of course to the case of Ananias and Sapphira, and 
the murmuring of the Grecians against the Hebrews, for the 
neglect of their widows in the ministrations of charity. To 
what historical events the imagery taken from the Revela- 
tion relates, is not understood. Its design seems to be, gener- 
ally, to describe the stupendous obstacles in the way of the 
Gospel. Compared with the force, the boldness, the origin- 
ality, the sublimity of the Apocalypse, how tame are all 
human compositions! 

Page 82. — Let it be forever understood, that Faith relies 
for the salvation of our race, not on what has been achieved, 
not on what is now accomplishing, not on any mere human 
probabilities, but simply on the Word of God. 

Page 84. — Peter, in his sermons, chiefly charges the Jews 
with the rejection of their Messiah. Doubtless the Law 
must constantly be preached, yet do we not sometimes over- 
look the fact, that want of faith in Christ is the sum and 
source of all sins? 



NOTES. 113 

Page 85, &c. — Paul, Luther, "Wesley, with many of the Re- 
formers, passed through the same distinct process of fearful 
bondage to the law, and joyful deliverance in Christ. The 
struggles and triumphs of the great apostle are delineated 
in Romans, vii and viii, with inspired vividness. Luther 
abandoned friends and prospects — shut himself up in the 
convent of Erfurth, fasted himself to a skeleton, subjected 
himself to the most humiliating indignities, and he found — 
peace and life? No ! Despair and death. Staupitz points 
him to Jesus. As he climbs Pilate's staircase, a voice from 
heaven more clearly reveals the way of faith. He simply 
believes in Christ, and becomes a tower of strength, gilded 
with the sunshine of God. Wesley preached for years under 
the shadow of Sinai, a slave to the Law, without Gospel joy, 
or power. A storm shows him the sting in his soul. But 
now, while listening to the preface of Luther, on the Ro- 
mans, the sweet peace of Jesus softly flows into his heart. 
From that hour he is a flame of fire. God's seal is on his 
soul. He becomes a chosen instrument in a spiritual revo- 
lution which bids fair to usher in the millennial morn. 

Page 88. — The following testimony of Chalmers is con- 
vincing and remarkable. He says, "I can not here but 
record the effect of an actual, but undesigned experiment, I 
prosecuted for some years among you. For the greater part 
of that time I could expatiate on the meanness of dishonesty, 
on the villainy of falsehood, on the despicable arts of cal- 

8 



114 NOTES.. 

umny — in a word, upon all those deformities of character 
which awaken the natural indignation of the human heart 
against the pests and disturbers of human society. But I 
am not sensible that all the vehemence with which I urged 
the proprieties of social life, had the weight of a feather, on 
the moral habits of my parishioners. And it was not till 
I got impressed with the alienation of the heart in all its de- 
sires and affections from God, it was not till reconciliation to 
Him became the distinct and prominent object of my minis- 
terial exertions, it was not till I took the Scriptural way of 
laying the method of reconciliation before them, it was not 
till the free offer of forgiveness, through the blood of Christ, 
was urged upon their acceptance, and the Holy Spirit 
given through the channel of Christ's mediatorship, to 
all who ask him, was set before them as the unceasing 
object of their dependence and prayers, that I ever heard of 
those subordinate reformations which I aforetime made the 
■^earnest and zealous, but I am afraid, at the same time, the 
ultimate end of my earlier ministrations." "See Vol. iv, 
p. 205, of Chalmers's works. 

Page 89. — Brainard's experience of the power of Christ 
over rude hearts, is of golden value. Speaking of a remark- 
able work of grace among the Indians at Crossweeksung, 
New Jersey, A. D. 1745, he says: " I can not but take notice 
that I have, in general, ever since my first coming among 
the Indians in New Jersey, been favored with that assistance 



NOTES. 115 

which is to me remarkable, in preaching * Christ crucified/ 
and making him the center and mark to which all my dis- 
courses among them were directed." Alluding to the pecu- 
liar doctrines of the cross, he remarks, "When these truths 
were felt at heart, there was now no vice uureformed, no ex- 
ternal duty neglected.-*' See Life of Brainard, Evangelical 
Family Library, pp. 261-266. 

Page 90. — All are acquainted with the utter failure of the 
Moravians to teach the Greenlanders human knowledge, till 
the cross was presented. 

Page 94. — The young missionary here alluded to was a 
rare instance of joyful consecration. May his labors people 
heaven, swell the songs of the redeemed, shed a glory over 
eternity I 

Page 96. — Who, in modern times, has endured so much 
for Christ's sake as Judson ! How apostolic his spirit and 
practice ! He did not sink the preacher into the teacher, or 
substitute the school for the pulpit. He went from jungle 
to jungle, and village to village, preaching Christ. What 
was the result? Scores of souls were converted, Churches 
were formed, ministers raised up. And the fruit remains. 
Three thousand persons have been baptized this year in 
Burmah. Yet some of the most celebrated mission schools, 
with all their vast, and expensive, and imposing machinery, 
scarcely exhibit one convert for a hundred pupils, and, in 
some, nearly a score of years has passed without the salva- 



116 NOTES. 

tion of a single sinner. Is it not time to return to the apos- 
tolic method of itineration? It is cheering to know that a 
man like Dr. Wayland, who has spent his life in a college, 
and risen to so high a rank as an educator of youth, has 
become convinced of the necessity of conforming our mission- 
ary operations to the practice of the primitive Church. 

Page 99. — Faith relies on the Divine promise. Still, she 
hails wilh delight the advancement of Science, Literature, 
Art, and Political knowledge. Religion expends itself nei- 
ther in sentimentality, nor intellectuality, but boldly seizes 
every practical expedient that may secure the salvation of 
men. 

Page 101. — God from the beginning seems to have designed 
America for the development and propagation of His re- 
ligion. Her climate, soil, lakes, rivers, mountains — her un- 
rivaled scenery, and resources of every kind, mark her as 
adapted to some mighty purpose. Consider her geogi'aphical 
position ! Physically, and commercially, she commands the 
world. On the west, she stretches her giant arm over the 
Pacific, and grasps Asia. North and south, the poles are 
her limits. On the east, she looks over into Europe. How 
striking her history ! Columbus makes his discovery just at 
the dawn of the Reformation. The United States — the heart 
of the continent — is settled not by Catholic Spaniards, but 
Protestant Englishmen. The elements of our nation were 
crystallizing just when the successes of Luther, the philos- 



NOTES. 117 

ophy of Bacon, the patriotism of Hampden, the discoveries 
of N"e-wton, the genius of Shakspeare and Milton, -were urg- 
ing the world along that new career of life which never can 
be arrested. The astonishing revivals of religion under 
Edwards, Whitefield, and, a few years later, the followers of 
Wesley, baptized our nation with Gospel -fire, and burned 
the impressions of truth ineifaceably into the hearts and 
minds of our people. Our fathers were the gift of heaven. 
The invention of the railroad and telegraph have occurred 
just in time to render the government of our vast territory 
practicable. The struggles of temperance, education, and 
various moral reforms, mark our land as the battle-ground 
for the truth. God seems even to convert curses into bless- 
ings. Slavery may be the means of evangelizing Africa, and 
foreign immigration of converting the world. Yes, let the 
Church do its duty, let the thousands crowding to our shores 
be met by the Bible and the missionary, by Christian sym- 
pathy and information, and they may be brought to Christ, 
and sent to their father-land as the heralds of salvation. 
Perhaps, for this very end, God leads them to our shores. 
Look to some facts, A few years since, a classmate of the 
celebrated Straus came to this country, driven to despair by 
his wretched creed. He finds peace in Jesus. He proclaims 
salvation to the Germans. More than ten thousand of his 
countrymen, including two hundred ministers, have since 
been converted from Rationalism and Catholicism, and are 



118 NOTES. 

scattered through the north and west, earnest, spiritual, 
devoted Christians. Missionaries, too, have been sent out to 
Germany, and many Churches established, amid fiery perse- 
cutionsj and some of their converts have even come over to 
swell Christ's army in our own land. A similar success has 
attended efforts among other classes of our foreign population. 
Is it then extravagant to believe that God may be intending 
earth's regeneration by means of these despised millions? 

Page 106. — Napoleon, on St. Helena, is recorded to have 
said, in substance, as follows: " Force may subdue men, but 
Love alone can bind them together. No empire, but one 
like that of Jesus Christ, has in itself the principle of per- 
manence." Powerful testimony for the Gospel, extorted 
from, perhaps, the greatest intellect that ever dazzled earth. 
Well for the world had he made the discoveiy at an earlier 
period of his bloody history ! 



THE END. 



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